Jesus
talked about heaven A LOT. Not as sitting around on a cloud for an eternity
while a cherub plays the harp (as if parents hadn’t suffered enough at school
concerts) but as the homecoming of our deepest longings, in this life.
When
he talked about heaven, Jesus spoke in parables, analogies drawn between
everyday life, with all its frustrations, and—in contrast—the fulfilment of
those longings.
When
his disciples asked why he spoke in parables, Jesus pointed to words spoken six
centuries earlier, by the prophet Isaiah:
“See, a king will reign in
righteousness,
and princes will rule with justice.
Each will be like a hiding-place from the wind,
a covert from the tempest,
like streams of water in a dry place,
like the shade of a great rock in a weary land.
Then the eyes of those who have sight will not be closed,
and the ears of those who have hearing will listen.”
Isaiah
32.1-3
That
is to say, Jesus was claiming to be the king who would reign in righteousness,
and he was seeking out princes who would rule with justice—though, in fact,
Jesus was unusual, in that he expanded princes to include women. Those whose
eyes and ears would be open to him, who would respond to the invitation to be
with him, become like him, and do the things he did.
Such
men and women would be like a hiding-place from the wind, a covert from the
tempest, streams of water in a dry place, the shade of a great rock in a weary
land.
That
is the kind of person I want to be. Someone to whom those who live around me
turn when the storm hits them, because in me—by God’s grace, and on account of
Christ in me—heaven can be found in my neighbourhood.
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